It is great place to share your thoughts publicly or privately. You can write your message in the share box at your Google plus stream and share that with selected circles, selected people even with every one in Google plus network.

But when writing message, some time the plain text format doe not act enough to make your message meaningful. Say, you want to highlight some words or sentences in you message body by keeping them in bold text format. Again some time you may want to use the strike through format as for your need. In Google plus, there is no such graphical option to format the text of your message.

But you can edit your message with some popular text format by enclosing the text in some special characters. Here is in details:

1. Bold: If you want show any word(s) in bold text format, enclose the word(s) with *.

Example: Type *This text will be shown bold* in the share box. the out put will be in bold format: This text will be shown bold.

2. Italic: Enclose the text with _ (underscore) to show it in italic format.

Example: _This is in italic text format_ will convert the enclosed text in italic format. The output ->> This is in italic text format.

3. Strike through: Enclose the text with – (dash) to strike through the text.

Example: strike through will show it as Strike Through.

Here is the message written in Google plus share box.

And this is the message looks like as:

Do you know more tricks on text formats in Google plus? – do share with us.

About Tanmay

Tanmay is the administrator as well as the owner of Oxhow. He likes to write about technology related articles which helps people getting problems solved easily.

@Draco18s, @Shedo Surashu, the *test* does not produce bold text if one of the asterisks are attached to another symbol in the beginning or in the end. Eg. a*test* will show without bold. It also works with an apostrophe which is slightly more discrete, ‘*test*. It’s a silly workaround, but it works. Google uses this formatting for GTalk as well.

Not that I’m aware of, Douglas. Google seems to use some kind of page-parsing script to figure out what the “primary” content of the page is, for those little blurbs. It’s [i]fairly[/i] good, but it does mess up sometimes.

No idea what it’s looking for, so I don’t know what one would need to do to alter their website layout so that the blurb is what one would want it to be.

Good day! I know this is kinda off topic
but I was wondering which blog platform are
you using for this website? I’m getting tired of WordPress because I’ve had issues with hackers and I’m looking at alternatives for another platform. I would be awesome if you could point me in the direction of a good platform.

Tried this just and now and at first thought it wasn’t working. It turns out that if you have line breaks in your text, then you need to enclose each line with the modifiers, rather than the whole text block.